David Salzer Broder (September 11, 1929[1] – March 9, 2011), was an American journalist, writing for The Washington Post for over 40 years.[2] He also was an author, television news show pundit, and university lecturer.

He earned a bachelor’s degree in liberal arts from the University of Chicago in 1947 and continued his studies there, receiving a master’s degree in political science in 1951. While at Chicago, he met fellow student Ann Creighton Collar, and they were married in Crawfordsville, Indiana, in 1951. They had four sons and seven grandchildren.[2]

He began working as a journalist while pursuing his master’s degree, serving as editor of The Chicago Maroon[7] and later at the Hyde Park Herald.[8] He was drafted into the U.S. Army in 1951, where he wrote for the newspaper U.S. Forces Austria (USFA) Sentinel, until he was discharged from the Army in 1953.

In 1953 Broder reported for the Pantagraph newspaper in Bloomington, Illinois, covering Livingston and Woodford counties in the central part of the state. From there he moved to the Congressional Quarterly in Washington D.C., in 1955, where he apprenticed under senior reporter Helen Monberg and got his first taste of covering congressional politics. During his four-and-a-half years at CQ, Broder also worked for The New York Times as a freelance writer.

In 1960 Broder joined the Washington Star as a junior political writer covering the presidential election that year between John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon. During his five years at the Star, he was promoted to national political news reporter and was a weekly contributor to the paper’s op-ed page.

Broder left the Star for The New York Times in 1965, hired by well-known Times political reporter and columnist Tom Wicker to serve in its Washington bureau.

After 18 months at The Times, Broder moved to The Washington Post, where he would remain for over 40 years, beginning as a reporter and weekly op-ed contributor. Later, he was given a second weekly column. Broder’s columns were distributed initially through The Washington Post Wire Service and then later syndicated through The Washington Post Writers Group. His columns were carried by more than 300 newspapers for many years.

The longtime columnist was informally known as the dean of the Washington press corps and the “unofficial chairman of the board” by national political writers.[9][10][11]

In May 2008, Broder accepted a buyout offer from The Washington Post Co., effective January 1, 2009,[12] but continued to write his twice-weekly Post column as a contract employee. In a letter to the publications that ran his column, Broder said: “This change will allow me to focus entirely on the column, while freeing up the Post to use its budget for other news-section salaries and expenses.”[12]

In June 2008, Ken Silverstein, a columnist at Harper’s magazine alleged that Broder had accepted free accommodations and thousands of dollars in speaking fees from various business and healthcare groups, in one instance penning an opinion column supporting positions favored by one of the groups.[13]Deborah Howell, The Washington Post's ombudsman at the time, wrote that Broder’s acceptance of speaking fees appeared to be a violation of the paper’s policy on outside speeches, as was the fact that some of the groups that paid Broder also lobby Congress.[14] Howell pointed out that Broder said “he had cleared his speeches with Milton Coleman, deputy managing editor, or Tom Wilkinson, an assistant managing editor, but neither remembered him mentioning them.”

Broder won the Pulitzer Prize for commentary in 1973 and was the recipient of numerous awards and academic honors before and after. In his Pulitzer Prize acceptance speech, Broder said:

Instead of promising “All the News That’s Fit to Print,” I would like to see us say—over and over, until the point has been made—that the newspaper that drops on your doorstep is a partial, hasty, incomplete, inevitably somewhat flawed and inaccurate rendering of some of the things we have heard about in the past 24 hours—distorted, despite our best efforts to eliminate gross bias, by the very process of compression that makes it possible for you to lift it from the doorstep and read it in about an hour. If we labeled the product accurately, then we could immediately add: But it’s the best we could do under the circumstances, and we will be back tomorrow with a corrected and updated version.[15]

For many years Broder appeared on Washington Week, Meet the Press, and other network television and radio[16] news programs. It was announced at the close of the August 10, 2008, broadcast of Meet the Press that Broder was celebrating his 400th appearance on that program, on which he first appeared July 7, 1963. He appeared far more often than any other person, other than the program’s panelists. The next closest person to Broder was Bob Novak, who had appeared on Meet the Press fewer than 250 times.

Broder was a weekly guest on XM/Sirius Satellite Radio’s The Bob Edwards Show starting in October 2004. On the premiere broadcast, Broder was joined by CBS News anchor Walter Cronkite as the program’s first guests. Broder also contributed to The Bob Edwards Show as a political commentator.[citation needed]

In 2001 Broder became a lecturer at the University of Maryland’s Philip Merrill College of Journalism while continuing to write full-time at The Washington Post. He generally lectured one class a year on politics and the press, the class meeting at the newspaper. Merrill College Dean Thomas Kunkel described Broder as the nation’s “most respected political journalist” when he announced Broder’s hire. Broder has also lectured at Duke University (1987–88).[17]

Broder’s work was also cited in two autobiographies by key figures in the history of The Washington Post: Personal History[23] by Post publisher Katharine Graham in 1997 and A Good Life: Newspapering and Other Adventures[24] by Post executive editor Ben Bradlee in 1995. More recently, Broder was included in former Post columnist Dave Kindred’s 2010 book on the paper’s struggles in the changing media landscape: Morning Miracle: A Great Newspaper Fights for Its Life.[25] Broder is also mentioned in Bill Clinton’s biography First in His Class[26] by David Maraniss.

Broder earned a place in a work of fiction, meriting a mention by a White House senior staffer to fictional U.S. president Jed Bartlet (portrayed by actor Martin Sheen) on the NBC-TV series The West Wing.[27]

The left wing blogger Atrios, a frequent critic of Broder’s work, has coined the term High Broderism:[28]

We normally think of “High Broderism” as the worship of bipartisanship for its own sake, combined with a fake “pox on both their houses” attitude. But in reality this is just the cover Broder uses for his real agenda, the defense of what he perceives to be “the establishment” at all costs.